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- Austrian Economics Overview
- Joseph T. Salerno
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Joseph T. Salerno
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Recorded at the 2003 Supporters Summit: Prosperty, War, and Depression . (25:00)
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Author:
Joseph T. Salerno
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Recorded at the Austrian Economics and Financial Markets conference at The Venetian Hotel Resort Casino, Las Vegas, 02-18-2005 [21:15]
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Joseph T. Salerno
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The French Liberal School had been dominant through four generations because they were privately funded, but when the government intervened in the French universities the Liberal School lost its hold. Richard Cantillon, Etienne Bonnot de Condillac, A.R.J. Turgot, Jean-Baptiste Say, Frederic Bastiat, and Michel Chevalier were responsible for
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Joseph T. Salerno
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Where the classical economists had gone wrong was to speak of goods as if they were abstract classes. The Austrians noted that their value theory did not talk about concrete units and could not explain how individuals valued goods. That’s why the diamond-water paradox of value was unsolved. The classical school also could not explain distribution.
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Joseph T. Salerno
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There were reasons for the decline of the Austrian School before its revival and rebirth by Mises and Rothbard. There was an Israel Kirzner view in the 1970s that the Keynesian avalanche had buried Austrian economics in 1936. Then there is a big bang theory of its rebirth in 1974 due to the South Royalton meeting and Hayek receiving the Nobel
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Joseph T. Salerno
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Prior to Mises there had been nothing written on the theory of monopoly price. Mises felt there could be some limited times of monopoly on the free market, e.g. diamond mines, but Rothbard felt that there could not be monopolies. Both theories developed out of Menger’s original thoughts. Lecture 4 of 10 from Joseph Salerno’s Revisionist History